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Guernica / By Joel Whitney

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Noam Chomsky: The U.S. Continues to Be a Terrorist State

Noam Chomsky discusses his forthcoming book, the hypocrisy of neoliberalism and 
where he feels hopeful about democracy despite U.S. terrorism.
May 12, 2010  |  
 
 
If Noam Chomsky’s critics have a common refrain, it is pointing to his habit of 
being far too hard on America’s motives and too easy on its opponents. The 
former, of course, is his métier. The latter criticism has limited (though a 
few important) instances. In fact, Chomsky’s central question is how do you 
punish the crook who owns the jailhouse, pays the police their salaries, and 
fails consistently to see his crimes as such? Or perhaps, how do you get a 
self-enamored hypocrite to reckon with his pathology? Certainly not by 
repeating the praise, or what Chomsky sometimes calls America’s “state 
religion” of self-worship. And despite this, in a very limited way, Chomsky 
does give credit where credit is due.

In his forthcoming book Hopes and Prospects, Chomsky admits that a black family 
in the White House is historic. But he credits not “America,” a “system of 
power” defined by “market interventions” in the economy that once tolerated, 
and even fought for, the right to own humans as slaves. Nor does he give much 
credit to “Brand Obama,” as he calls the phenomenon that elected our new 
president, insisting that the new president is “likely to ‘have more influence 
on boardrooms than any president since Ronald Reagan.’” In fact, Chomsky gives 
credit for the 2008 election, in a way, to himself and his ilk.

In an early manuscript of the book, Chomsky writes, “The two candidates in the 
Democratic primary were a woman and an African-American. That, too, was 
historic. It would have been unimaginable forty years ago. The fact that the 
country has become civilized enough to accept this outcome is a considerable 
tribute to the activism of the nineteen sixties and its aftermath, with lessons 
for the future.” As such, this small tome is Chomsky’s legacy book.

And high time. His landmark critique of B.F. Skinner that crippled 
behaviorism’s predominance in psychology and linguistics turns fifty this year. 
His first book on politics, American Power and the New Mandarins: Historical 
and Political Essays, turns forty. The Essential Chomsky, edited by Anthony 
Arnove, came out from the New Press last year, in time for Chomsky’s eightieth 
birthday. And Chomsky’s wife died of cancer last winter, which would make 
anyone take stock. Regularly voted into the “top public intellectual” polls 
various magazines frequently run, the linguist and foreign policy critic, said 
to be worth two million dollars, remains a polarizing figure.

What’s remarkable is how Chomsky’s criticism of the Vietnam war and America’s 
many interventions seem even more relevant today, prescient in their 
understanding of how American greed, dehumanization of others, cultural 
ignorance, and hypocrisy are rewritten as pragmatic, not moral, mistakes. In 
“The Remaking of History,” from Toward a New Cold War: Essays on the Current 
Crisis and How We Got There, he writes, “They may concede the stupidity of 
American policy, and even its savagery, but not the illegitimacy inherent in 
the entire enterprise.” He continues a page later, “One may criticize the 
intellectual failure of planners, their moral failures, and even the 
generalized and abstract ‘will to exercise domination’ to which they have 
regrettably but understandably succumbed. But the principle that the United 
States may exercise force to guarantee a certain global order that will be 
‘open’ to transnational corporations—that is beyond the bounds of polite 
discourse.”

Yet Chomsky has been criticized for accuracy and balance, for the petty (citing 
statements made by an “embassy” rather than “ambassador”) and the heinous 
(apologist for Pol Pot; a distortion, he insists, of his views), but most 
commonly, it seems, for comparing U.S. behavior to Hitler’s. In Prospect 
Magazine, Oliver Kamm writes of Chomsky’s early political writings as going 
“beyond the standard left critique of U.S. imperialism to the belief that ‘what 
is needed [in the US] is a kind of denazification.’” “This diagnosis,” Kamm 
continues, “is central to Chomsky’s political output. While he does not depict 
the U.S. as an overtly repressive society—instead, it is a place where ‘money 
and power are able to filter out the news fit to print and marginalize 
dissent’—he does liken America’s conduct to that of Nazi Germany. In his newly 
published Imperial Ambitions, he maintains that ‘the pretenses for the invasion 
[of Iraq] are no more convincing than Hitler’s.’”

On balance, Chomsky is a vital, even indispensable voice in the American 
cultural debate, needed to remind us of the outrage we should feel as the 
modernization of American life brings us to accept as necessary and 
understandable the devastation of foreign countries with little actual public 
debate and no input from the citizens of those countries. How do our 
presidents’ “terrorist” campaigns (in Chomsky’s terms) become a normal 
functioning of the state? How does a country that so readily welcomes 
outsiders, or purports to, so easily bury them by “overthrowing governments 
around the world and installing malicious dictatorships, assassinating people” 
or write them off as collateral damage? Perhaps we should, or do, on some 
level, share his outrage. And yet his voice has been every bit as ruthless, and 
occasionally selective (like most good rhetoricians), as his opponents suggest. 
Does that run counter to, or complement, the voice and methodology of the 
systems of power he criticizes?

—Joel Whitney for Guernica

Guernica: You’ve been savaging U.S. foreign policy for a long time. What’s new 
in Hopes and Prospects? Or would you say that you’re reworking a single thesis 
with new examples?

Noam Chomsky: There are new things that are happening. But I don’t think the 
basic principles of international affairs or social organization or aspirations 
for the future change very much. In fact, they haven’t for a long time.

Guernica: Does that imply that your approach as a critic isn’t effective?

Noam Chomsky: On the contrary, it has been quite effective in ways I have 
discussed repeatedly and at length, even though it hasn’t reached as far as 
changing fundamental principles and their institutional basis.

Guernica: One thing that never changes in your work is the meditation on the 
devastating effects of U.S. foreign policy. Here in the U.S., we endlessly tell 
ourselves, and our leaders especially do this, that “we’re good.” No matter the 
results, our intentions are good.

Noam Chomsky: Systems of power don’t have good intentions. You’ll occasionally 
in history find a benevolent dictator or a king who has the interests of the 
people at heart. But fundamentally, structures of power are not moral agents. 
We don’t look for good intentions. Of course, they all profess good intentions. 
But of course that’s also true of Hitler.

Guernica: Are “structures of power” amoral or immoral?

Noam Chomsky: Structures of power are amoral. The CEO, say, of the American 
Petroleum Institute may care a lot about whether his grandchildren will have a 
decent world to live in. But as CEO of the American Petroleum Institute, he’s 
going to try to make that impossible by doing what they’re doing right now, in 
fact. Working out ways to try to duplicate the success of the insurance 
industry in undermining any kind of health reform. They’ve already announced, 
“We’re gonna try to learn from [the health insurance industry’s] tactics and 
block any kind of energy or environmental bill.” Now he knows (he’s not an 
idiot) that could lead to a serious catastrophe which could undermine the 
prospects for the life of his grandchildren whom he cares a lot about. But as 
the director of a petroleum institute, he can’t consider that. If he did, he’d 
no longer have that position.

Guernica: You write about how corporations have these super-human rights and 
that investors and by-laws force them to take every advantage to maximize 
profits. But what you just said about structures of power being amoral, it 
seems to me that your work is actually asking them to be moral, no?

Noam Chomsky: I’m not addressing CEOs of corporations or President Obama or 
anything like that. I’m addressing people, saying, “Look, you’ve got a lot of 
opportunities. You can effect changes, which will change the actions of 
structures of power, which will in fact dissolve the structures of power.”

Guernica: What are those changes you mention above that can dissolve the 
structures of power?

Noam Chomsky: Consider the systematic dismantling of industrial capacity, say 
GM plants, destroying the workforce and communities, while Obama’s 
transportation secretary is abroad seeking to use federal stimulus money to 
contract with Spanish firms to provide high-speed transport—which could be 
produced by converting the plants that are being dismantled, by the skilled 
workforce being abandoned. It might require takeover of the facilities by 
“stakeholders”—workforce and community. There’s no economic principle that bars 
that, and it could happen with sufficient consciousness and popular support.

Guernica: One group you seem to expect a little more out of, by way of 
intermediaries between us people and the “power structures,” seems to be 
intellectuals. In the “Responsibility of—”

Noam Chomsky: The people we call intellectuals aren’t necessarily smarter or 
more knowledgeable than anyone else. But they happen to have a lot of 
privilege, and privilege confers responsibility. And so they oughta do things. 
I don’t expect them to.

Guernica: You’ve called “the inability of educated classes to perceive what 
they are doing” an “historical universal.”

Noam Chomsky: Close to it.

Guernica: And you cite a story in the New York Times where “the reviewer,” you 
write, “constitutional lawyer Noah Feldman, described Osama [bin Laden]’s 
descent to greater and greater evil over the years, finally reaching the 
absolute lower depths, when ‘he put forth the perverse claim that since the 
United States is a democracy, all citizens bear responsibility for its 
government’s actions, and civilians are therefore fair targets.’” What’s 
significant about this?

Noam Chomsky: What’s significant is what directly follows it. There had been an 
election in Palestine, actually the first really free election in the Arab 
world, and two days after Noah Feldman’s article appeared, Steven Erlanger on 
the front page of the New York Times reported blandly that the U.S. government 
has just undertaken to punish the people of Palestine for voting the wrong way 
in a free election. Well, that makes Osama bin Laden look pretty tame. And 
these things appear right next to each other, and no one notices it.

Guernica: Am I right to believe that you essentially make no distinction 
between U.S. “terrorism,” i.e. interventions, and, say, al Qaeda’s terrorism?

Noam Chomsky: Yeah, U.S. terrorism is often far worse because it’s a powerful 
state. Take 9/11. That was a serious terrorist act. In Latin America, they 
often call it “the second 9/11” because there was another one, namely September 
11, 1973.

Guernica: In Chile.

Noam Chomsky: Suppose that al Qaeda had not just blown up the World Trade 
Center, but suppose that they’d bombed the White House, killed the president, 
established a military dictatorship, killed maybe fifty to a hundred thousand 
people, maybe tortured seven hundred thousand, instituted a major international 
terrorist center in Washington, which was overthrowing governments around the 
world and installing malicious dictatorships, assassinating people, [and] 
brought in a bunch of economists who drove the economy into its worst disaster 
maybe in history. Well, that would be worse than what we call 9/11. And it did 
happen, namely on 9/11/1973. All that I’ve changed is per capita equivalence in 
numbers, a standard way to measure. Well, okay, that’s one we were responsible 
for. So yeah, it’s much worse.

Guernica: Some critics of U.S. foreign policy have been arguing for a 
universally accepted definition of terrorism to standardize in media, 
governments, etc.

Noam Chomsky: I agree. Reagan declared a war on terror in 1981—he said that’d 
be the core of our foreign policy. And since then, I’ve been writing about 
terrorism using the official definition in the U.S. code, and in Army manuals, 
and, in fact, in British law. It’s a pretty good definition. Now that’s 
considered outrageous. And the reason is when you use the official definition, 
it follows pretty quickly that the United States is a leading terrorist state. 
Now that’s the “wrong” conclusion, so therefore we can’t use that definition. 
There are academic conferences and sober volumes on terrorism trying to find 
some appropriate definition, and the “appropriate” definition has a very 
definite condition to meet. It has to include the terror that they carry out 
against us but exclude the terror that we carry out against them.

Guernica: True or false: no one did more to oppose the tyrannical communism of 
the Soviets?

Noam Chomsky: I don’t know what you mean by “tyrannical communism of the 
Soviets.” That was one particular form of tyranny, one that was out of U.S. 
control, and perceived as offering a model for others, so naturally the U.S. 
generally opposed it—though not when it was bearing the brunt of the war 
against the Nazis. The U.S. has also opposed democracies and repeatedly 
overthrew them and established tyrannies. And it supported, and still supports, 
brutal tyrannies. The question is misformulated and can’t be answered.

Guernica: Soviet communism—you don’t know what that is?

Noam Chomsky: I know what I think it is, and has been since 1918: the most 
severe attack on socialism/communism apart from fascism. What I don’t know is 
what you think it is.

Guernica: Your definition sounds fine. Utne characterized your work as having 
“an unflagging sense of outrage.” I’m wondering, when you diligently dissect 
exactly what your country has done in places like Chile, Vietnam, Iraq, and 
elsewhere, when you log numbers of innocent civilians killed, and carefully 
present these outrageous quotes from members of government or heads of 
corporations, what you’re feeling. I believe the anger comes through. What else 
is going on? Shame? Guilt?

Noam Chomsky: All of them. Shame and guilt, of course, because there’s much 
that we can do about it, that I haven’t done. And outrage because, yes, it’s 
outrageous. And disgust at the hypocrisy in which it’s veiled. But there’s no 
point in revealing those emotions. You know, maybe I can talk about them with 
my wife or something. But what’s the point of going public with them? Doesn’t 
do any good.

Guernica: Yet those emotions come through in your work as a subtext.

Noam Chomsky: Maybe. And it very much angers supporters of state violence; in 
fact, they’re infuriated by it, when it comes out.

Guernica: What do you mean?

Noam Chomsky: When it comes out, they are sometimes infuriated by it. I 
happened to be in England a couple of days ago [for] an interview at BBC. One 
of the things the interviewer brought up is a statement of mine showing how 
incomparably awful I am. The statement is “One has to ask whether what the 
United States needs is dissent or denazification.” And that’s so utterly 
outrageous; it shows I’m kind of a maniac from outer space. So I asked him what 
I always do when somebody brings it up. I said, “Did you read the context?” And 
of course he hadn’t. So I said, “Okay, here’s the context.” During the Vietnam 
War, the Chicago Museum of Science set up a diorama of a Vietnamese village in 
which children could be on the outside with guns and shoot into the village and 
try to kill people. And there was a protest by a group of mothers, a quiet 
protest, protesting this thing. There was an article in the New York Times 
condemning—not the exhibit, but the mothers—because they were trying to take 
away fun from the kiddies. And in that context I said, “Sometimes you have to 
wonder whether what’s needed is dissent or denazification.” I think it’s just 
the right thing to say.

Guernica: You’ve written how utterly Iraqis are excluded from the decisions 
made about their country...

Noam Chomsky: Or Vietnamese or Central Americans, or a long list of others. In 
fact, we don’t even care about them. If you listen to National Public Radio and 
happened to have it on last night (or maybe it was PBS), they were discussing 
the debates about what to do in Afghanistan. One of their correspondents was 
asked to comment on the costs of the war. She went through the costs of the 
war, so many hundreds of billions, and then the most severe cost—you know, a 
thousand American soldiers killed—and then the discussion ended. Now, is that 
the only cost? There’s no cost to Afghans?

Guernica: One of the ironic “hopes” in your book is the term “hope” as used by 
what you call “Brand Obama.” Brand Obama seemed to buttress Americans’ 
assumptions that because we elected a part-black president, we must be over our 
racism and this is more evidence that we have a noble purpose and a basic 
goodness. But you point to other countries, India, Bolivia—and where 
else?—where an outsider was elected.

Noam Chomsky: It’s happening in many parts of Latin America. Bolivia is 
particularly dramatic. But it’s also true in Brazil. Lula, the president of 
Brazil; he’s a peasant, steel worker, union organizer, didn’t have much higher 
education. What put him into power are these vast popular movements. They don’t 
go along with his policies altogether; by any means, they’re pretty critical of 
them. But part of the electoral base, like the Landless Workers’ Movement may 
be the most important mass popular movement in the world. The same is happening 
elsewhere. Comparing that with our system should lead us to a deal of 
introspection about just who and what we are.

Guernica: Are you and Hugo Chavez friends?

Noam Chomsky: We’ve met on a friendly basis, but I think you might ask yourself 
why you are asking this question, and not asking, for example, whether Lula, 
Correa, and others are friends (for the record, they are, to the same extent). 
I think we know the answers, but they might be useful for you to think about 
the matter more carefully.

Guernica: I am unaware of either of those others holding up one of your books 
and giving your sales a renewed jolt.

Noam Chomsky: It doesn’t answer my question. The fact that he held up my books 
says nothing about whether we are friends. We’ve never met. I’ve praised work 
of Hume’s, but it doesn’t mean he was my friend. The question arises about 
Chavez, not Lula (who I know a lot better) or Correa (who I just spent a few 
hours with) or many others who are at the heart of the “pink tide” because 
Chavez is demonized by state/media propaganda. I don’t accept that. Nor, I 
think, should you.

Guernica: You just said you have met him. Now you haven’t? Your reflexive 
antagonism aside, I’m happy to give you a moment to explain why we shouldn’t 
accept state/media propaganda against Chavez.

Noam Chomsky: I hadn’t met him when he held my book up at the UN. Since then, I 
did spend a few hours with him, like Correa, nothing like Lula, who I spent 
several days with and got to know pretty well. Sorry if it sounds like 
reflexive antagonism. It’s rather that I think we should be asking ourselves 
why the reflexive question is about Chavez—not Lula, or Correa, or for that 
matter Morales, who I haven’t met but have written about far more than Chavez.

Guernica: In the new book, you hit Obama pretty hard over his cabinet and the 
Wall Street types in his administration. You also basically allege that 
neoliberalism and the free market policies that we recommend to others—not only 
do we not follow them, but they don’t work, in terms of standard of living, 
wages, etc. You actually say protectionism does work and point to some 
interesting examples. Ronald Reagan. South Korea.

Noam Chomsky: Adam Smith had advice for the American colonies in the seventeen 
seventies. He advised the colonies to follow classical economic 
principles—they’re not very different from neoliberalism. In fact, it’s pretty 
much what economists today recommend to the third world. He said, Keep to your 
comparative advantages—the term “comparative advantage” hadn’t been invented 
yet—produce what you’re good at, which is catching fish, hunting fur, and 
growing food, and export it to us in England. And import superior British 
manufactures. But the U.S. gained its independence, so it didn’t have to follow 
that advice, and didn’t. It immediately set up under Alexander Hamilton high 
protective barriers to try to bar superior British textiles, in later years 
British steel. And it built up its own manufacturing base under protective 
barriers and by an enormous amount of state intervention. Take, say, cotton, 
the fuel of American industrialization. Well, how did America produce cotton? 
First of all, by exterminating the indigenous population. Secondly, by slavery. 
Those are pretty severe market interventions. Yeah, they worked.

Guernica: So your greater point is...

Noam Chomsky: I’m not recommending protectionism. I’m just saying, let’s be 
honest. Before we preach to others, let’s find out the truth about what we 
ourselves do. So take Ronald Reagan whom you mentioned. He’s considered the 
high priest of free markets. In fact, he was by far the most protectionist 
president in post-war U.S. history.

Guernica: So what are you recommending?

Noam Chomsky: I think decisions should be made in an entirely different manner 
for entirely different ends. Should producing more goods and consuming more 
goods be the highest value in life? That’s not obvious, by any means.

Guernica: And what would be?

Noam Chomsky: Living decent lives, in an environment that provides for people’s 
essential needs, offers them opportunities to become creative, active, to work 
together in solidarity, [and lead] more happy, creative lives. That’s a more 
important goal, I think.

Guernica: Here’s one critic of your work, Nick Cohen in the Observer: “The 
lesson of 11 September is that no constraints of morality or conscience would 
stop al-Qaeda exploding a nuclear weapon. If however, it is all our fault, as 
Chomsky says, perhaps we can avert catastrophe by being nicer and better 
people. Perhaps we can, but Chomsky is as reluctant to admit that al Qaeda is 
an autonomous movement as he is to admit the existence of the democratic and 
socialist opposition to Saddam Hussein.”

Noam Chomsky: They’re mentioning somebody with my name. But it doesn’t relate 
at all to anything I’ve ever said or believe. Who did you say you’re quoting?

Guernica: Nick Cohen in the Observer.

Noam Chomsky: Oh, Nick Cohen’s a maniac. If you’ll notice, he never cites 
anything. Does he cite anything? That already gives you the answer. Go back and 
check. He doesn’t cite anything. These are just diatribes, tantrums. I’m not 
interested in them.

Guernica: The greater point is that there are maniacs who have sought from 
their clerics and received permission to use nuclear weapons on civilians.

Noam Chomsky: Yes, there are. And we should try to prevent it. And there are 
ways to prevent it, and I discuss them, but they’re not his ways. His ways are 
just bomb everybody in sight. Well, I think that’s the way to increase terror. 
In fact, it has increased terror.

Guernica: It’s increased terror sevenfold, you write (citing analysts on the 
Iraq war).

Noam Chomsky: But he doesn’t like what I say, so he’ll scream and shout and 
slander. Why pay attention to him? Do you read Stalinist party acts?

Guernica: I don’t.

Noam Chomsky: Okay.
Joel Whitney is a founding editor of Guernica.

http://www.alternet.org/books/146815/noam_chomsky%3A_the_u.s._continues_to_be_a_terrorist_state/?page=entire

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